Thinking in Education
Education, perhaps the most basic need for people, is the process that provides the development of human. According to Meyer (1976) the aim of education is to nurture the individual, to help, to realize the full potential that already exists inside him or her. There has always been a strand of educational thought that held that the strengthening of the child’s thinking should be the chief business of the schools and not just an incidental outcome – if it happened at all (Lipman, 2003). Qualified education should show the way to students about what and how to learn. While students evaluate what they learned and their learning methods, they manifest their critical thinking abilities (Emir, 2009).
As Cotton indicates (1991): “If students are to function successfully in a highly technical society, then they must be equipped with lifelong learning and thinking skills necessary to acquire and process information in an ever changing world”.
One of the aims of education should be developing students’ thinking skills as well as motor skills, which is basic goal of contemporary approaches in education. According to Elder & Paul (2008) students are not passive but active while they are realizing critical thinking.
Critical Thinking and Education
One of the significant aims of education is to produce learners who are well informed, that is to say, learners should understand ideas that are important, useful, beautiful and powerful. Another is to create learners who have the appetite to think analytically and critically, to use what they know to enhance their own lives and also to contribute to their society, culture and civilization.
These two aims for education as a vehicle to promote critical thinking are based on certain assumptions.
Brains are biological. Minds are created. Curriculum is thus a mind-altering device. This raises the moral requirement to treat learners as independent centres of consciousness with the fundamental ability to determine the contours of their own minds and lives.
Education should seek to prepare learners for self-direction and not pre-conceived roles. It is, therefore, essential that learners be prepared for thinking their way through the maze of challenges that life will present independently.
Education systems usually induct the neophyte into the forms-of-representation and realms of meaning which humans have created thus far.
Careful analysis, clear thinking, and reasoned deliberation are fundamental to democracy and democratic life.
On the basis of these considerations the capacity for critical assessment and analysis emerges as fundamental for enjoying a good quality of life
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